Rachel Bogardus Drew

Sr. Research Director, Public Policy

Rachel Bogardus Drew is a senior research director with the Policy Development & Research team at Enterprise Community Partners. She conducts quantitative analyses and studies of important policy issues around affordable housing, housing and community development, housing finance, homeownership, and housing supply and demand concerns. Her work focuses on demand-side analyses of the affordable housing crisis, climate and disaster resilience, and the intersections of housing policy and racial equity.

Rachel was formerly a research associate and post-doctoral fellow at the Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard University, where she managed and co-wrote the “State of the Nation’s Housing” report for six years. She has a bachelor’s degree in economics from Dartmouth College and a doctorate in public policy from the University of Massachusetts. Her doctoral dissertation studied the role of socially constructed messages about homeownership and its benefits on the tenure preferences of renter households. She is based in the Enterprise Community Partners’ Boston office.

Phone Number
781.591.4708
Office Location

Boston
399 Boylston Street
Boston, MA 02116

Brief

Gentrification Definitions and Racial Change: Considering the Evidence

May 1, 2020
Cities are not homogeneous by race and ethnicity, however, with some neighborhoods still majority non-Hispanic white. Nor are changes within these neighborhoods consistent; for example, those that have experienced gentrification – or the in-migration of higher-income households into traditionally low-income communities – likely have different patterns of racial change than non-gentrified neighborhoods, given inequalities in income distributions across households by race and ethnicity.
Report

Gentrification: Framing Our Perceptions

October 9, 2018
This paper is the first in a series that looks at gentrification and its implications for policymaking. It highlights the importance of measurement to framing our perceptions about gentrification and its consequences. Subsequent papers will demonstrate the extent of overlap between different measures, and the intersections of gentrification and education policy decisions.